The 2000 is easier to deal with towing it in the normal position. Jack up
the rear on jackstands, and remove the bolts and nuts behind the U-joint at
the rear of the driveshaft. A 5-minute job. Then pull out the driveshaft and
toss it in back of the seats. The 2000 has a two-piece splined driveshaft,
the small piece in front stays bolted on the trans tailshaft. So no gear oil
drips as with the 1600/4-speed setup. You can then tow normally with the
rear wheels firmly on the ground and know your tranny is safe.
Fred
----- Original Message -----
From: "Diana Wilson" <goldenmaia@onebox.com>
To: <datsun-roadsters@autox.team.net>
Sent: Friday, May 04, 2001 11:49 PM
Subject: Re: Drop the Driveshaft??
> Welp...
>
> We're towing Lil' Red to the 'spa' on Sunday for work and we're using
> the 2 Wheel Dolly. We were recomended to just set it up as normal with
> the two front wheels on the Dolly, put it in neutral and just go.
Apparently
> with the standard transmition there's not the same worries as with an
> automatic. (And we're 'only' going 100 miles or so too). It was warned
> that putting the car with the back wheels up on the tow dolly wouldn't
> be good because the car would be more likely to be unstable with the
> car in a less aerodynamic position. (Bad on the gas too even if it doesn't
> sweve around)
>
> -D-
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